From Transuranic to Superheavy Elements: A Story of Dispute and Creation

Cham: Springer Verlag (2018)
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Abstract

The story of superheavy elements - those at the very end of the periodic table - is not well known outside the community of heavy-ion physicists and nuclear chemists. But it is a most interesting story which deserves to be known also to historians, philosophers, and sociologists of science and indeed to the general public. This is what the present work aims at. It tells the story or rather parts of the story, of how physicists and chemists created elements heavier than uranium or searched for them in nature. And it does so with an emphasis on the frequent discovery and naming disputes concerning the synthesis of very heavy elements. Moreover, it calls attention to the criteria which scientists have adopted for what it means to have discovered a new element. In this branch of modern science it may be more appropriate to speak of creation instead of discovery. The work will be of interest to scientists as well as to scholars studying modern science from a meta-perspective.

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Chapters

Some Philosophical Issues

Research in superheavy elements is not only a highly specialized branch of modern science its history also casts light on problems of a more general nature. One of these problems, a classical one in the history of science, is the uneasy relationship between physics and chemistry in transdisciplinary... see more

Super-Superheavy Elements

Since the mid-1990s nine more superheavy elements synthesised in either cold or hot fusion processes have entered the periodic table. Elements with atomic numbers 110–112 were produced in Darmstadt, Germany, whereas most of the other elements owed their discoveries to collaborations of Russian and A... see more

The Transfermium Wars

With the rival discovery claims in the early 1970 of the first transactinide elements, numbers 104 and 105 in the periodic table, the situation with regard to official recognition of new elements became increasingly chaotic. Definite criteria for discovery and naming procedures were needed. As a res... see more

Failed Discovery Claims

Without suggesting a name, in 1971 Amnon Marinov[aut]Marinov, A. and collaborators announced to have detected element 112 by bombarding a tungstenTungsten target with high-energy protons. The discovery claim was not accepted by specialists in the synthesis of superheavy elements who were unable to r... see more

On Element Discoveries

While there is little ambiguity in the definition of a chemical element, it is far from evident what it means to have discovered a new element and what the criteria for discovery are. In the post-World War II era recognition of new elements was the responsibility of IUPAC, the International Union of... see more

Transuranic Alchemy

The history of superheavy elements cannot be cleanly separated from the earlier history of transuranic elements with atomic numbers smaller than 104. By the late 1960s elements up to this place in the periodic table, including lawrenciumLawrencium of Z = 103, had been discovered although in a few ca... see more

Beyond Uranium, Ca. 1890–1950

The transuranic elements at the end of the periodic table have since the 1960s been known as superheavy elements. Until 1939 no element heavier than Uranium was known and yet there was in the earlier period considerable interest in the possible existence of such elements. The interest was in part of... see more

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